The Internet Committee
Welcome!
You've reached the internet committee's little niche on the interweb. We hope you like it; it's sort of a behind the scenes of sectionc2a.com.
What do we do here?
Not anything super-fantastic. We keep the site running, and sometimes we change a thing or two. Our committee's description is: The Internet committee maintains the section website as well as other internet resources used by the section.
Who We Are:
Chairman:
Adviser: Elliott Patton
Here's a nice image

Each of the five lodges in the section can proudly display this official website image on their website! Cool, huh?
Our Site's Technical Ability
Each and every site is XHTML1.0 Strict and CSS2.0 valid (check out the images at the bottom.) That means that it follows the standards set by the W3C, or the World Wide Web Consortium. They decide the rules, not us. You may have noticed that you type in "www." in lots of URLs. That stands for them. They're powerful guys, like the Jedi Council of the Internet.
The whole site has been extensively tested on Internet Explorer 7.0 and Mozilla Firefox 2.0. If you use a different browser and something doesn't work correctly, please shoot us an e-mail.
Resources
Perhaps you're here to learn a bit about web-site creation. We've used a lot of resources over the years, and will tell you some of our favorites.
I've (Jacob) used this site for years upon years. They have a great tutorial for HTML and CSS, along with great descriptions of every html tag and css property I can think of, including cool examples. The author of the site has a nice philosophy, and will tell you what he thinks is bad readily.
I came across this one a few months ago. Really helped with PHP, if you're interested in that. It also has great tutorials on a bunch of programming languages. It gives descriptions of html tags and css properties, too, and tells you which browsers will accept what, and what W3C will and won't accept anymore.
These guys, as I said, are the top dogs. They have plenty of links to everything from other projects to tutorials. They validate your code (for free of course) so you can make sure it's solid.
If you are interested in PHP Hypertext Protocol, check out their site for everything on the language.
Additional thanks to
SEO Logic for the free hit counter on the home page.
Hivelogic for creating an encoder that stops the spammers from emailing us.
phpBB for the open-source software that gave us our forum.